Herrmann Esther, Wobber Victoria, Call Josep
Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology. Leipzig, Germany.
J Comp Psychol. 2008 May;122(2):220-30. doi: 10.1037/0735-7036.122.2.220.
Primates' understanding of tool functionality has been investigated extensively using a paradigm in which subjects are presented with a tool that they must use to obtain an out-of-reach reward. After being given experience on an initial problem, monkeys can transfer their skill to tools of different shapes while ignoring irrelevant tool changes (e.g., color). In contrast, monkeys without initial training perform poorly on the same tasks. Compared to most monkeys, great apes show a clear propensity for tool using and may not require as much experience to succeed on tool functionality tasks. We investigated this question by presenting 171 apes (Pan troglodytes, Pan paniscus, Gorilla gorilla, and Pongo pygmaeus) with several tool-use problems without giving them initial training or familiarizing them with the test materials. Apes succeeded without experience, but only on problems based on basic properties such as the reward being supported by an object. However, only minimal experience was sufficient to allow them to quickly improve their performance on more complex problems in which the reward was not in contact with the tool.
灵长类动物对工具功能的理解已通过一种范式得到广泛研究,在该范式中,向受试对象呈现一种工具,它们必须使用该工具来获取够不着的奖励。在最初的问题上获得经验后,猴子可以将其技能转移到不同形状的工具上,同时忽略无关的工具变化(例如颜色)。相比之下,未经初始训练的猴子在相同任务上表现不佳。与大多数猴子相比,大猩猩表现出明显的使用工具的倾向,并且在工具功能任务上取得成功可能不需要太多经验。我们通过向171只猿类(黑猩猩、倭黑猩猩、大猩猩和红毛猩猩)呈现几个工具使用问题来研究这个问题,不给它们初始训练或让它们熟悉测试材料。猿类在没有经验的情况下也取得了成功,但仅在基于诸如奖励由物体支撑等基本属性的问题上。然而,只需极少的经验就足以使它们在奖励与工具不接触的更复杂问题上迅速提高表现。